Patchwork Problem The Internet's design was indifferent to whether the information packets added up to a malicious virus or a love letter; it had no provisions for doing much besides getting the data to its destination. Nor did it accommodate nodes that moved -- such as PDAs that could connect to the Internet at any of myriad locations. Over the years, a slew of patches arose: firewalls, antivirus software, spam filters, and the like. One patch assigns each mobile node a new IP address every time it moves to a new point in the network. [Click here to view graphic representations of David D. Clark's four goals for a new Internet architecture.] Clearly, security patches aren't keeping pace. That's partly because different people use different patches and not everyone updates them religiously; some people don't have any installed. And the most common mobility patch -- the IP addresses that constantly change as you move around -- has downsides. When your mobile computer has a new identity every time it connects to the Internet, the websites you deal with regularly won't know it's you. This means, for example, that your favorite airline's Web page might not cough up a reservation form with your name and frequent-flyer number already filled out. The constantly changing address also means you can expect breaks in service if you are using the Internet to, say, listen to a streaming radio broadcast on your PDA. It also means that someone who commits a crime online using a mobile device will be harder to track down. In the view of many experts in the field, there are even more fundamental reasons to be concerned. Patches create an ever more complicated system, one that becomes harder to manage, understand, and improve upon. "We've been on a track for 30 years of incrementally making improvements to the Internet and fixing problems that we see," says Larry Peterson, a computer scientist at Princeton University. "We see vulnerability, we try to patch it. That approach is one that has worked for 30 years. But there is reason to be concerned. Without a long-term plan, if you are just patching the next problem you see, you end up with an increasingly complex and brittle system. It makes new services difficult to employ. It makes it much harder to manage because of the added complexity of all these point solutions that have been added. At the same time, there is concern that we will hit a dead end at some point. There will be problems we can't sufficiently patch." |
Picking the Browser's Padlock
02/19/2009









Comments
Now it's back to the net which is already in progress!
05/12/2006
Posts:1
I am the VP, Technical Strategy at NetAlter and we have been working on developing a completely alternative form of Internet for the past 8 years. And last year we founded a company, NetAlter Software Ltd, India to reach our goals. Our company has made a patent application for our concept and has been recently published by the US Patent Office. I would request you to preview the same and give us your feedback. Our goals are to provide an alterntive not a replacement to the present Internet so the end user has a choice. This year we plan to start developing a browser that when installed on a users pc will contribute to form the alternative internet. Kindly visit www.netalter.com for details pertaining to our project and you are free to contact me (gshenoy@netalter.com) for any further questions you may have.
08/04/2006
Posts:1
danth
02/01/2007
Posts:3
It could still use the physical Internet infrastructure but could have dedicated bandwidth and connectivity (i.e, using DWDM, there would not be any way for this type of communication to be compromised with the exception of hardware failure induce by EMF or otherwise).
mbluett
03/25/2007
Posts:2